Joined: Sat May 30, 2009 11:08 amPosts: 252Location: The Gemini sector, tooling around the space lanes of the frontier.

I can't believe I just now noticed this, and please forgive me if this has been brought up before. In Chapter 1, On Page 19, panel 1, there is a shield on the Rockefeller Military Research Center sign, to the left of "military research." I looked closely at it, and it appears as though the Superman S is drawn in there. As we all know, Superman's chest emblem was literally a shield with an S in it in his old formative days, and even to this day, Supes' emblem is still referred to as a "shield." Am I freaking out, or is this something anyone else can see?

_________________Who Washes The Washmen's Infinite Secrets of Legendary Crossover Knight Wars?"If you immediately know the candlelight is fire, the meal was cooked a long time ago."

What's more interesting to me is that it doesn't look exactly like the Superman shield. Rather, it almost looks like a grenade. I personally find this symbolic of Dr. Manhattan: In overly basic terms, he's Superman turned into a weapon for Uncle Sam.

EDIT: While the subject has indeed been mentioned in other topics, I can't seem to find a thread devoted to it specifically. If you guys want to talk about it in greater detail, feel free.

_________________This is truly a madhouse. And I'm the lunatic running it. I've spent three years wondering if I should be proud or ashamed.

Interesting thing is, while Siegel and Schuster appropriated the term "supeman" for their superhero creation, they essentially misinterpreted the concept of Nietzsche's ubermensch. The Ubermensch creates his own code of morality that is free from past ethics, a code of morality that he lives by. The character of Superman, however, embodies the sense of morality that the society has taken for years, fueled by a stressed importance in an afterlife and not in life on Earth.

You could apply this to Watchmen with the (possibly deliberate) misquotation of Dr. Glass when they say "the superman exists, and he's American!" Instead, Glass said, obviously, "God exists, and He's American." When nick-naming Dr. Manhattan, instead of misrepresenting Nietzsche, they misrepresent God.

Interesting thing is, while Siegel and Schuster appropriated the term "supeman" for their superhero creation, they essentially misinterpreted the concept of Nietzsche's ubermensch. The Ubermensch creates his own code of morality that is free from past ethics, a code of morality that he lives by. The character of Superman, however, embodies the sense of morality that the society has taken for years, fueled by a stressed importance in an afterlife and not in life on Earth.

You could apply this to Watchmen with the (possibly deliberate) misquotation of Dr. Glass when they say "the superman exists, and he's American!" Instead, Glass said, obviously, "God exists, and He's American." When nick-naming Dr. Manhattan, instead of misrepresenting Nietzsche, they misrepresent God.

I was hoping someone more knowledgeable than I on the topic of philosophy would chime in there. Thanks, emP... sorry, I mean emFox.

The character of Superman, however, embodies the sense of morality that the society has taken for years, fueled by a stressed importance in an afterlife and not in life on Earth.

What has the afterlife ever had to do with Superman? Hell, what does it have to do with Dr. Manhattan, who is near-immortal?

I interpreted emFox's statement to mean that society's sense of morality is fueled by the Christian belief in an afterlife. You know, denying yourself pleasure and treating others right in preparation for your eventual ascent to heaven. I had an argument with a woman who claimed that we need religion back in mainstream society because otherwise people won't do the right thing. Sadly, it looks like she may have been correct.